The challenge: I had to work with a medium length, double-edged blade of diamond cross-section AND keep the piece reasonably within my main period of interest—1550-1650. That pointed to dudgeon daggers of the first half of the 17th c., some of which had blades of this description, although these seem to have been much narrower than the one I used. My blade is closer to the width of later Scottish dirks, but those blades tend to be single-edged. So, I created a compromise design closer to dudgeon than dirk, but with some features of both. Blade and overall length seem to be more appropriate for a dudgeon. Like many early dirks, the curved base of the hilt does not have a metal plate between wood and blade.
Blade: Windlass Steelcrafts
Hilt, Assembly, Finish: Sean Flynt
OA Length: 12.75"
Grip (not including ballocks): 3.75"
Ballocks: 1"
Price: $18 (that's not a typo–this blade was approx. $15 shipped (see Atlanta Cutlery). A few more dollars covered the poplar for the hilt.
Photos (the last one shows where I think this piece might fit in with similar dudgeons of ca. 1600-1650):









